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Monday, November 25, 2013

Cosmic Origami and What We Don't Know - NPR's On Being

From this week's On Being podcast from NPR, hosted by Krista Tippett, a conversation with astrophysicist Lord Martin Rees on the science-fiction-like explorations in physics around parallel realities and the deep structure of space-time.

Parallel realities and the deep structure of space-time sound like science fiction. These are matters of real scientific inquiry. Lord Martin Rees is an astrophysicist and self-professed atheist who paints a fascinating picture of how we might be changed by what we do not yet know.

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is Master of Trinity College and Professor of Cosmology and Astrophysics at the University of Cambridge

2010 Reith Lectures: Scientific Horizons Listen to Martin Rees present his "Scientific Horizons" Reith Lectures in 2010 on the BBC, exploring the challenges facing science in the 21st century. The series was presented as four lectures:

Astrophysicist Mario Livio works with science the Hubble Space Telescope makes possible. He is not a religious person. But he's fascinated with the enduring mystery of the very language of science, mathematics.

We'll take a fresh and thought-provoking look at Darwin's life and ideas. He did not argue against God but against a simple understanding of the world — its beauty, its brutality, and its unfolding creation.

Science and religion are often pitted against one another; but how do they complement, rather than contradict, one another? We learn how one man applies the deepest insights of modern physics to think about how the world fundamentally works, and how the universe might make space for prayer.